Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5863885 | Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A lower extremity movement task captured differences under strain between healthy and LSS populations. The lower extremity Fitts' Law task accurately measured differences between healthy and LSS participants. For the subjects in this study, strain was sufficient to prevent LSS patients from demonstrating improvement in the variability of the ballistic phase of movement execution, whereas LSS patients' movement performance remained unchanged. This study also showed that regardless of strain, as task difficulty increased, LSS patients were more adversely impacted in the planning and execution of their lower limb movements than healthy control participants. The lower extremity motor control task (Fitts' task) can be used as a performance-based outcome measure to measure differences between healthy and LSS populations.
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Authors
Steven R. DC, PhD, Michael MD, FRCSC, Valerie Pelleck, Erica Ramos, Yasmine Amad, Cheryl M. MSc (PT), PhD,